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The Bond of Fire

Betawolf53
7
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The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
Kael, a skilled hunter of the Wildlands, lives a quiet life providing for his remote village. His days are measured in the rhythm of the forest: the track of deer, the snap of a bowstring, the silence of predators stalking unseen. But everything changes when, while pursuing a stag, he stumbles upon a wounded dragon—one thought long extinct, hunted to the edge of memory by decree of Queen Maris. The dragon, Shadowwing, is a creature of midnight scales and golden eyes, scarred by battle and near death. Against every law, Kael tends to its wounds, using his hunter’s craft and knowledge of the wild to nurse it back to strength. In those secret encounters, Kael discovers not a beast, but a mind—proud, cunning, and strangely attuned to him. A bond begins to form, one that neither man nor dragon fully understands. But in helping Shadowwing, Kael becomes a traitor in the eyes of the crown. Queen Maris, ruthless and ambitious, has built her power on the extermination of dragons and the fear they once inspired. To her, even a single surviving wyrm threatens her rule. When word of strange sightings in the Wildlands reaches her, she dispatches soldiers and spies to root out the truth. As Kael hides his growing bond, he crosses paths with Lyra, a young woman marked by the ancient bloodline of dragon riders. Fierce and headstrong, Lyra has spent her life searching for signs that the riders might rise again. To her, Kael is more than a hunter with a dangerous secret—he may be the key to awakening a destiny long buried. Together, Kael, Lyra, and Shadowwing must decide whether to remain hidden or defy the crown. As armies gather and ancient prophecies stir, Kael finds himself drawn into a battle not just for survival, but for the future of dragonkind—and for the freedom of a world held in the queen’s iron grip. In the end, Kael must face a choice: remain the hunter he has always been, or embrace the rider he is destined to become.
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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1: Whispers of Ashes

The forest had its own language, and I had spent my life learning to listen. The snap of a twig told me where a deer had run off to, the silence of birds warned me when a wolf prowled nearby, and the sharp scent of pine carried the story of last night's storm. Hunting was never just about the bow in my hand—it was about knowing when the world shifted. That morning, as mist curled low across the Wildlands and the air sat too still, I knew something had changed. Something was watching me.

The trail was still fresh. I could make out where its hooves had pressed into the damp soil, the edges sharp from only moments ago. My bow rested loosely in my grip as I moved through the undergrowth, each step measured, each breath drawn slow and quiet. Hunting was all about patience, and there was no room for error.

I caught a glimpse of it ahead–a young buck, antlers still smooth, grazing at the edge of a clearing. My stomach tightened. Mira would be happy to have venison tonight; Father would be proud if I was able to bring it down with a clean shot. I raised the bowstring to my ear, steadying my aim.

But as I was getting ready to release the string and hit my mark there was a shift in the forest.

The ears on the deer pricked as it jerked its head towards the trees, and in a heartbeat it bolted, vanishing into the mist with a crash of branches. Keeping my bow drawn I scanned the shadows. Something else had to of startled it. Something bigger.

I followed, not after the deer, but after the disturbance that had spooked it. The ground was telling a new story–claw marks that gouged into stone, deep ruts in the mud as though something heavy was dragging across it. No animal that I knew of left signs like these. At least none that I have seen growing up.

Curiosity was gnawing at me. Against my better judgment, I trailed the marks through twisted pines and dripping ferns until the forest opened into a ravine. That's where I saw it.

At first, my mind refused to believe. Scales black as storm clouds glistened in the pale light, wings splayed awkwardly against the rocks. Smoke curled from it nostrils with each ragged breath. A dragon.

My hands began to tremble as I finally decided to lower my bow finding it useless. Every tale I'd ever heard of said to fear them, to kill them if ever such a chance came. I should have just turned back, gone running home.

But it was already too late for that its eyes were already locked on me–golden, burning, too bright to belong to any beast. But instead of the rage I was expecting, I saw pain.

It was wounded.

The hunter in me knew a creature this size should be killed or left for dead, that to linger was to court death. But I something deeper, something i couldn't name, rooted me to the ground.

For the first time in my life as a hunter, I pitied my prey.

I stood frozen, as the rain dripping from my hood, my bowstring slack between my fingers. Every lesson my father taught me echoed in my head: A wounded beast is a dangerous beast. If you hesitate, it will kill you.

I should just end it right here, right now. It would only take a single arrow through the eye, and it could all be over. The threat would be gone.

But when the dragon shifted, letting out a low guttural sound, I realized it wasn't a growl. It was… a groan. a sound of pain, not rage.

I took a step closer, my boots sinking into the mud. My pulse thundering in my ears. "You're not what they say you are," I whispered, not sure if i was speaking to the creature or to myself.

Its golden eyes followed me. They didn't blaze with fire–they pleaded. One wing lay bent at an unnatural angle, blood seeping between the scales, dark against the black hide. Its chest rose and fell unevenly, each breath a struggle.

I swallowed hard. If the villagers or even my father had found it. They'd kill it before it could even lift its head. That was the way of things. the way of survival.

And yet… I couldn't bring myself to draw my bow.

I crouched low, Heart hammering. "If I help you," I murmured, "what will you do? Burn me? Tear me apart?"

It blinked slowly, smoke curling weakly from its nostrils. It made no move to strike, though it easily could have. I was close enough now that one swipe of its claws would split me in two.

Instead, it lowered its head, pressing its snout to the earth. A gesture I didn't understand. Submission? Trust? Desperation?

"Alright," I breathed. "But if you kill me, it'll be your last mistake."

The dragon's eye flickered, almost like the glint of understanding.

And at that moment, I realized I was about ot make a choice that I'll never be able to take back.